Making mistakes is a part of business. You learn from your mistakes and you grow. However, sometimes they turn into blunders and result in you losing billions of dollars. Moreover, you can’t ignore the possibility of your business shutting down as well. This article will take you through some of the biggest blunders in business

Making mistakes is a part of business. You learn from your mistakes and you grow. However, sometimes they turn into blunders and result in you losing billions of dollars. Moreover, you can’t ignore the possibility of your business shutting down as well. This article will take you through some of the biggest blunders in business and what the world would’ve been if not for these.

Ronald Wayne

For those of you who don’t know about Ron, he was the third investor in Apple back in 1976. Steve Jobs had bought in Ronald to head the business part of the then small tech company. However, Ron decided to quit the company for reasons only he would be able to explain. Steve Jobs and Wozniak decided to buy him out. Ron had approx 10% shares and decided to sell them for a mere $800. If not for that decision, Ron would’ve been worth a cool $92 billion (without dilution).

Yahoo refuses to buy Google

Larry Page approached Yahoo back in 1998 to sell them his new search engine, Google. However, Yahoo turned him down. All he had asked for was $1 million. The reason for this was that Yahoo was busy working to improve their own search engine. Not only this, Page came again in 2002. However, this time the offer was for $5 million. Google was making a mark in the market and valuation had obviously increased. Yahoo refused again. Today, 16 years later, Google’s parent company Alphabet Inc. is worth $739 billion while Yahoo has been acquired by Verizon for $5 billion.

Real Networks passes on the iPod

In 2000, Tony Fadell went to Real Networks for a new generation of MP3 player. They laughed at the engineer and rejected him. Steve Jobs on the other hand just said yes. What came after that entirely changed the course of music players and streaming. He allowed users to fill up the device with songs they liked. Currently, Apple is the biggest player in the music industry.

Blockbuster and Netflix

Back in the early 90s, Blockbuster was the place to be incase you wanted to watch a movie at home. The store gave you the opportunity to rent movies. In 2000, Netflix offered Blockbuster to buy their company for $50 million. Still not sure about the improvement of internet services, Blockbuster turned them down. Today, Netflix has a net worth of $152 billion, while Blockbuster is down to only 1 store in the US.

Sony rejects Marvel rights

Marvel was recovering from a debt and needed someone to help them come back in the market. This was almost 20 years ago. At that time Sony had approached them to buy the rights of Spiderman franchise. However, the head of Marvel at that time had offered Sony officials the right s of the whole of Avengers for $25million. That includes all mega superheroes like, Iron Man, Captain America, and even Thor. However, Sony was just interested in Spiderman and bought the rights for $10 million. Today, you know how big the Marvel Universe is.

Quaker and Snapple

Snapple was a huge bottled fruit drink back in the day and was available at every retailer. Quaker saw this opportunity and decided to buy the company for $1.7 billion. They thought they could market it better and take the drink global. However, their plan backfired and new competitors started gaining market share. Unfortunately, they had to sell Snapple to Triac for $300 million in 1997. Well things get worse for Quaker as 3 years after this deal; Triac sold Snapple to Cadbury for $1.43 billion. Quaker lost out on almost a billion dollars.

Kodak

In 1975, Kodak developed the first digital camera allowing people to store upto 100kb of images. However, the company was doing extremely well selling film that they laughed at the team that had pitched this idea. They lost out on a technology that would change the camera game and never introduced the ‘filmless camera’ to public. In 2012, Kodak filed for bankruptcy as they could not keep up with competitors going digital.

James Howells

In 2009, not a lot of people were aware of bitcoins. At that time, James Howells had bought 7,500 bitcoins valued at $130 each for $975,000 in total. Not knowing what would happened, he stored them in a hard disk, locked it in a drawer and forget about it. 8 years later, 1 bitcoin was worth $11,350. Unfortunately, Howells had thrown away the hard disk somewhere. That hard disk contained bitcoins worth $85 million. No one knows where it is.